Showing posts with label Erysimum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erysimum. Show all posts

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Bloom Day - May 2014

May is usually one of the very best months in the garden here.  This year, we're sitting through our second major heatwave.  The Santa Ana winds are blowing and the risk of wildfire is high.  These are conditions we generally face in September and October, not in spring.  The heat, dry air, and lack of rain has had impact on the garden.  Plants that were in full bloom last year at this time, like the Alstroemeria and the Argyranthemum, have already bloomed out.  Others, like the Iris germanica and Digitalis purpurea, have produced only sporadic bloom thus far.  I've lost a few plants and expect to lose more.  However, some plants are thriving, most notably the Agapanthus.

On May 20th last year, I posted about the arrival of masses of Agapanthus buds.  But, on this Bloom Day, the Agapanthus are already in full bloom throughout the garden.

Clumps of Agapanthus below the mimosa tree

More clumps below the California pepper trees

Clumps in the front yard



Other standouts in the backyard include:

Achillea 'Moonshine' and Salvia 'Mystic Spires'

Erysimum linifolium 'Variegatum'

Euphorbia 'Ascot Rainbow'

Hebe 'Patty's Purple'

Leucanthemum x superbum 'Snow Lady'



Some smaller plants showing their resilience in the backyard include:

Anagallis 'Wildcat Mandarin' - flowers close until the sun shines on them

Bulbine frutescens has been blooming continuously since it was planted in early March

Cotula lineariloba 'Big Yellow Moon' forms a mat from which petal-less, disk-shaped flowers spring

Hibiscus trionum, aka flower of an hour, is an annual that produces flowers that survive only a few hours

I love Nigella damascena 'African Bride' but find it hard to place because the white petals can look dingy next to bright whites

The flowers of Scorzonera hispanica smell like chocolate!

I wish I'd bought more of this cherry skullcap (Scutellaria suffrutescens)



The southeast side garden has taken a beating.  In addition to repeated onslaughts by raccoons, there are signs that a gopher is tunneling about there.  The sun and wind also poses challenges in that area.  Still, some plants are holding up well.

Both Acanthus mollis 'Summer Beauty' and Arthropodium cirratum would prefer a less sunny setting but they're troupers

While I was disappointed by the dwarf yellow Anigozanthos, I can't fault this red variety, which has bloomed non-stop since January

Osteospermum ecklonis '3D Silver' doesn't care for the heat but the Ageratum houstonianum 'Blue Horizon' planted from 6-packs only weeks prior to the 1st heatwave are taking the temperatures in stride

Cuphea micropetala 'Candy Corn' is supposed to grow 1-3 feet tall and 1-2 feet wide but this plant is nearly prostrate and is spreading far further than expected

Self-seeded Gaillardia (probably 'Goblin')

Tagetes lemmonii 'Compacta' doesn't mind the heat



In the front yard, the 'Joseph's Coat' rose which was covered with flowers last May, has already produced 2 flushes of bloom and has little to show for itself this May.  The 'Pink Meidiland' shrub roses are blooming, although not as heavily as they did last year.




Other plants are undaunted by the weather conditions.

The indefatigable Cuphea x ignea 'Starfire Pink' may swamp the roses in the front beds

Gaura lindheimeri 'Snow Fountain' has produced its first flush of blooms

Hemerocallis 'Spanish Harlem' continues to pump out new blooms each day


Pelargonium x domesticum 'Georgia Peach' is a reliable bloomer



I caught the final blooms on the pineapple guava in the bed bordering the street.

Feijoa sellowiana grows just inside of the hedge



The vines covering the arbor between the vegetable garden and the dry garden are in full bloom.

Distictis laxiflora interwoven with Trachelospermum jasminoides



The biggest floral splashes in the dry garden are provided by the daylilies.

Hemerocallis 'For Pete's Sake' surrounded by the "weed" Geranium incanum



But a few other plants add subtle interest.

Bright pink Cistus x pulverulentus 'Sunset'

Dorycinium hirsutum, aka Hairy Canary Clover

Globularia x indubia


Groundcovers Thymus praecox 'Pink Chintz' and Teucrium chamaedrys


Finally, there's the slope, which has held up surprisingly well despite limited irrigation.

Centranthus ruber, Oenothera speciosa and Euphorbia 'Dean'Hybrid'



Those are the highlights for this exceptionally hot May Bloom Day in Southern California.  Please visit Carol of May Dreams Gardens, the host of the monthly Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day, to see what's blooming in her garden and to find links to the posts of more than a hundred other contributors.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Bloom Day - January 2014

This January 2014 there are blooms here, there and everywhere.  While there are no large masses of flowers anywhere as there will be, hopefully, in the April-May timeframe, our unseasonably warm weather has once again produced blooms that won't show up in many other areas until spring.  There are no roses but that's in part due to the fact that I cut back all the rose bushes just after Christmas.  By comparison with most areas of the US, still contending with the "polar vortex" described by the news media, we nonetheless have an embarrassment of riches.  For lack of a better idea as to how to present them, here they are in alphabetical order.

Agapanthus (no ID), blooming significantly ahead of schedule

Alstroemeria (no ID) just coming into bloom in the backyard border

Anemone 'Dr. Fokker,' the first to bloom in the backyard border

Dwarf Anigozanthos hybrid, planted in the side border

Antirrhinum majus, rocket variety, in a raised planter in the vegetable garden

Arbutus 'Marina,' almost perpetually in bloom

Dark pink Argyranthemum frutescens, in a pot at the bottom of the slope

Light pink Argyranthemum frutescens in the backyard border

White Argyranthemum frutescens in the side yard

Yellow Argyranthemum frutescens in the side yard border

Bauhinia x blakeana (Hong Kong orchid tree) in the front yard

Camellia japonica 'Taylor's Perfection,' planted alongside the garage in the vegetable garden, doesn't care for our Santa Ana winds

Ceanothus (no ID), breaking into bloom in the backyard border

Cerinthe retorta, a new introduction I haven't made a decision on

Coleonema pullchellum 'Sunset Gold' in the front border, another long-term bloomer

Coreopsis 'Tahitian Sunset' - I'm not thrilled with it but, as its bloomed almost continuously since June, I'm keeping it for now


Crassula 'Springtime,' blooming in a neglected area under a Ceanothus hedge


Echium handiense 'Pride of Fuerteventura,' a dwarf variety, in the dry garden

Erysimum linifolium 'Variegatum' in the bed surrounding our fountain

Geranium 'Tiny Monster' in the side yard

Gomphrena 'Itsy Bitsy' in the side yard
Grevillea lavandulacea 'Penola' in the dry garden

A newly unfurled bloom on Grevillea 'Superb'

A more mature bloom on Grevillea 'Superb'

Hebe 'Wiri Blush' in the backyard border

Leptospermum scoparium 'Pink Pearl' in the dry garden

The bracts on Leucadendron 'Wilson's Wonder' in the front border are shifting from yellow to red

A dwarf Leucanthemum x superbum 'White Lady' in the backyard border

Unbelievably, one of the Lisianthus 'Echo Pink,' planted in early June in the backyard border, is still blooming
A somewhat sad, but blooming, Loropetalum chinense var. rubrum in the side yard


Matthiola incana (Stock), blooming in the backyard border
Nemophila menziesii (Baby Blue Eyes) in the backyard border


Narcissus (no ID) in the border outside the living room window

This Osteospermum ecklonis '3D Silver' is in the side yard but all throughout the garden are in bloom

Osteospermum ecklonis 'Serenity Purple' in the dry garden

Osteospermum fruticosum (trailing African daisy), I think, in the side yard

Yellow Papaver nudicaule (Iceland poppy) in the side yard

White Papaver nudicaule, also in the side yard

Pelargonium hybrid 'White Lady,' sited on the slope

Pelargonium ionidiflorium 'Pink Fairy Cascade,' also planted on the slope

Pelargonium peltatum 'Pink Blizzard' (ivy geranium) in a pot by the front door, another long-term bloomer
Phalaenopsis (no ID) brought from my mother-in-law's home last July


Polygala fruticosa 'Petite Butterfly,' planted near the street

Ribes viburnifolium 'Catalina Perfume Currant' on the back slope

Viola (no record of variety) in the backyard border


If last year's Bloom Day posts are an indication, the Agapanthus, Echium and Ribes are blooming earlier this year than they did last year.  Camellia sasanqua, which was still blooming last January 15th, is finished for the season this year, and Tibouchina urvilleana, also in bloom last January, has yet to recover from the last round of pruning. The timing of more recent introductions is harder to assess.

Please visit Carol, the host of Garden Blogger's Bloom Day, at May Dreams Garden for a look at what's blooming in other gardens around the US and elsewhere in the world.